Cognitive economics is concerned with the beliefs and mental operations
held by actors placed within a dynamical and strategic environment. It
appears as a synthesis of an eductive research program dealing with
crossed expectations of actors and of an evolutionist research program
dealing with collective learning processes. It first aims at extending
the framework of game theory in order to better fit with the results of
rapidly increasing laboratory experiments concerned with individual
choices and collective interactions. Cognitive economics also aims at
better explaining some original economic phenomena involving boundedly
rational agents in an institutional setting such as financial bubbles,
job search or technological innovation.
Written in an informal way, this book is addressed to philosophers or
cognitive scientists curious of how economics deals with cognition and
to graduate students in economics eager to discover how economics
evolves.